The Yamaha RX-V659B, the company's midrange receiver, delivers a lot of bang for the buck. It offers highly accurate autosetup, multi-room capability, a turntable input for the audiophile set and it interfaces with Yamaha's optional iPod dock, the YDS-10. Anyone seeking the latest in connectivity options will lament the absence of HDMI ports, but those remain a comparative rarity for receivers in this price range.
Design
The Yamaha RX-V659B is a handsome receiver in a high-tech sort of way. Its nicely organised front panel presents the user with a complete array of controls and the large, distinctive orange LED display is easier on the eyes at night than more typical blue readouts. The full-size unit measures 435 by 171 by 421 mm, and it weighs 12.3 kilograms. Unlike some receivers that seem to double as space heaters, the RX-V659's cool-running amplifiers won't singe your entertainment centre.
The Yamaha Parametric Room Acoustic Optimizer (YPAO) autosetup system determines speaker sizes and volume levels, measures the distances from the speakers to the listener, checks the wiring, and uses equalisation to balance the frequency response of all the speakers. The system works well and is quite accurate; even neophytes can have a good-sounding home theatre up and running with relatively little time and effort.
The receiver's remote has a side-mounted slide switch that toggles between Amp, Source and TV modes, which makes it easy to control different components. Its layout is fairly intuitive and mostly logical, with the exception of the iPod control, and we quickly learned our way around the button arrangement.
YDS10S - iPod Dock (sold separately).
Installation and setup of the Yamaha YDS-10 iPod dock (sold separately) are more involved than with either Onkyo or Denon's equivalent devices. Operating the iPod via the RX-V659B's remote proved less instinctive than we would have liked. The Dock will relay your iPod's menu to your TV, but locating songs and playlists is more awkward than with the other brands' systems. On the upside, we appreciated the dock's single-cable hookup -- Denon's iDock has five wires hanging off its rear!
Features
This seven-times-100-watt receiver not only offers most of the latest surround processing modes -- including Dolby Pro Logic IIx and Dolby Digital EX, DTS-ES Discrete 6.1, Neo:6, and 96/24 -- Y amaha's engineers went the extra digital mile and created a vast assortment of user-customisable Cinema DSP surround modes. There's also an adjustable lip-sync delay for use with video displays that lag behind the audio.
Connectivity options are plentiful: five A/V inputs with S-Video (including a front-panel hookup), three of which can accommodate component video. The Yamaha RX-V659B can convert any of the composite or S-Video inputs to the component-video output, so you need only one video output from the receiver. There are no HDMI connections to be found; while that's not unusual for receivers in this price range, HDMI -- and compatibility with a greater range of cutting-edge high-def products such as HD-DVD and Blu-ray -- is available on a small but growing number of receivers.
The Yamaha supplies six digital audio inputs (two coaxial and four optical, including one on the front panel) and one optical output. Audiophile goodies include turntable and 7.1-channel SACD, DVD-Audio, Blu-ray and HD-DVD analog inputs. The receiver also has 7.1-channel preamp connections to hook up a separate power amplifier. The speaker connections, meanwhile, extend beyond the norm; there's a pair of left and right outputs for front Presence speakers that serve to augment the sound from main left and right speakers and to produce a wider front soundstage. For simpler than multi-room hookup, Yamaha provides a set of B stereo speaker outputs, or go ahead and use the RX-V659B's IR, 12-volt or RCA audio outputs for two-zone operation.
Performance
CD sound on the Yamaha RX-V659B was crisp and clear, though lacking the sense of depth and richness we get from higher-end receivers. That said, Yamaha's bass was unusually well defined and muscular; when we played Holly Cole's steamy Temptation CD, David Piltch's stand-up bass took on a remarkably realistic presence in our room. The drums on Mat Kearney's Nothing Left to Lose CD delivered a gutsy punch.
Turning to movies, the Master and Commander DVD proved the RX-V659B's top-notch home-theatre skills. The 100 watts per channel came in handy on the battle scenes where the surround was completely enveloping. We detected no strain when the movie's cannonballs blasted across the bow of our home theatre.
The RX-V659B, like all Yamaha receivers built over the last number of years, has Silent Cinema, a proprietary surround processor for headphones. Switching between stereo and Silent Cinema over our Grado RS-1 headphones, the differences were dramatic. The stereo was fine, but Silent Cinema unfurled a much larger sound field, delivering a more speakerlike sound.

Photo gallery: Yamaha RX-V659B










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